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Assessment
• Assessment lies at the heart of the learning experience: how learners are assessed shapes their understanding of the curriculum and determines their ability to progress. At the same time, assessment and feedback form a significant part of practitioners’ workloads and, with increased numbers, reduced budgets and higher learner expectations, continue to be a higher learner expectations, continue to be a matter of concern for many institutions.
• Effective assessment and feedback can be defined as practice that equips learners to study and perform to their best advantage in the complex disciplinary fields of their choice, and to progress with confidence and skill as lifelong learners, without adding to the assessment burden on academic staff.
[From JISC, Effective Assessment in a Digital Age]
REAP
• The Re-Engineering Assessment Practices (REAP) principles of good assessment and feedback, developed as a result of the REAP feedback, developed as a result of the REAP project funded by the Scottish Funding Council during 2005–2007, provide a framework for discussing how assessment and feedback can have a beneficial impact on learning.
[From JISC,Effective Assessment in a Digital Age]
Principles
Assessment tasks should (engage) 1. Capture sufficient study time and effort in and out of class
2. Distribute students’ effort evenly across topics and weeks
3. Engage students in deep not just shallow learning activity
4. Communicate clear and high expectations to students
Good feedback practice should(empower) Good feedback practice should(empower) 1. Clarify what good performance is (goals, criteria, standards)
2. Facilitate the development of reflection and self-assessment in learning
3. Deliver high quality feedback to students: that enables them to self-correct
4. Encourage dialogue around learning (peer and tutor-student)
5. Encourage positive motivational beliefs and self-esteem
6. Provide opportunities to act on feedback
7. Provide information that teachers can use to help shape their teaching
From Gibbs and Simpson (2004) and Nicol and Macfarlane-Dick (2006)
Peer and self
Review
• it is now recognised that learning programmes
that provide opportunities for learners to
acquire skills of self-monitoring and self-
regulation (for example by assessing their own regulation (for example by assessing their own
work against defined criteria) prompt deeper
and more effective learning
[From JISC,Effective Assessment in a Digital Age]
Student View
• the National Student Survey has reported consistently lower levels of satisfaction with assessment and feedback than with other aspects of the higher education experience.
• ‘We would like to see all universities and colleges • ‘We would like to see all universities and colleges
implement a systematic policy to enhance
traditional teaching methods with new
technologies [and] leverage technology to provide
innovative methods of assessment and feedback.’
National Student Forum Annual Report 2009
E-Assessment
adoption
• 2009 JISC Review of Advanced e-Assessment Techniques (RAeAT) indicates that, despite potential benefits, adoption in higher education of the more complex opportunities made possible by opportunities made possible by technology is variable. Without departmental champions to support implementation, take-up of the more challenging aspects of e-assessment, especially in the context of summative assessment, has been slow.
Technology in
Assessment
• Technology, if used appropriately, can add value to any of the activities associated with assessment: from establishing a culture of good practice to the processes involved in submission, marking and return of assessed submission, marking and return of assessed assignments; from the delivery of assessment to the generation of feedback by practitioners or peers.
[From JISC,Effective Assessment in a Digital Age]
E-Assessment
Benefits• Enhances student learning
• reduces the workload of administrators and practitioners
• online assessments can be accessed at a greater range of locations than is possible with paper examinations
• enables learners to measure their understanding at times of their own choosing
• immediate expert feedback delivered online in response to answers • immediate expert feedback delivered online in response to answers selected by learners can rapidly correct misconceptions
• the time saved in marking can be used in more productive ways, for example in supporting learners experiencing difficulties
• outcomes of assessments can be more easily collated and evaluated for quality assurance and curriculum review processes
• management of peer and self review
• space saving for storage of papers
• reduced travel by externals and academic staff
Turnitin
• Peermark – allow
student to peer
review and embed
assessment criteria assessment criteria
– self assess
• Paper submission
– Grademark -
Rubric – general
feedback audio
Rubric
Peer Review
“Students don't just learn from instructors they also learn from one another.
PeerMark facilitates peer review so that students can evaluate each other's work and
learn from their classmates.”
iParadigms
“..if we want students to develop critical thinking, judgement and
autonomy in assignment production they should be provided with high-
level evaluative experiences similar to those of experts. Peer review,
students evaluating and commenting on each other's work, is one way to
achieve this”
PEER
3: Set no. of reviews
(self & instructor reviews)
Setting up PeerMark?
1: Identify document for peer-review (self & instructor reviews)peer-review
2: Identify timings & marks available – if any
4: Set questions for peer reviewers
The PeerMark workflow
Students submit assessment
online through Turnitin
Instructor may also review/
comment at this point
Assessments distributed
automatically for review
Students revise assessment
in light of reviews
1
2
5
6
Students carry out assigned
reviews online using questions
based on final marking rubric
On receipt of peer reviews,
students carry out self review
Students submit revised
assessment through Turnitin.
Instructors mark final piece of
work using defined rubric
within GradeMark
3
4
7
Peerwise
• PeerWise is an online repository of multiple-choice questions that are created, answered, rated and discussed by and discussed by students.
• Students create multiple choice questions
• Provide feedback to fellow students
• Create a bank of questions for further use
• Engage in the assessment process
• Improve exam results
• http://peerwise.cs.auckland.ac.nz/docs/instructors/
• http://youtu.be/j1tN006KEWo
50secs
ClickersWhy should institutional management be interested?
• EVS can be applied in almost all disciplines
• EVS applies to lectures (central to low cost mass
teaching) and introduces interactivity.
• Introducing EVS is low risk: student attitude
measures have been markedly positive in almost all
cases both from the start and after years of use
• EVS is used to implement "Interactive Engagement"
• Instant feedback
• Anonymity encourages
engagement
• Maintains attention throughout
class• EVS is used to implement "Interactive Engagement"
(Hake), and a specific variety of this "Peer
instruction" (Mazur), which is almost the only
application of technology that has been
demonstrated to raise exam results consistently by
a substantial amount
• EVS contributes significantly to both individual
learning and community building in a class
• A wide variety of types of pedagogic application may
be (and have been) implemented with the same
equipment
class
• Improves memory retention –
Curve of Forgetfulness
• Integrates a game approach
• Provides a skeleton revision
prompt
• http://www.turningtechnologies
.co.uk/
http://www.reap.ac.uk/reap/index.html
http://www.reap.ac.uk/reap/public/Guides/BP5_InteractiveLecturesEVS.pdf
Voicethread
• Educators at over 500 of the world’s leading Higher-Ed institutions have made VoiceThread a part of their 21st-Century learning platform, their 21st-Century learning platform, offering students in online courses, hybrid courses, and site-based courses the opportunity to collaborate and interact with instructional materials.
• Media is placed on Voicethread and
participants include their comments as
text, audio, video, phonecall
• The media could be a site plan, project
outline, simulation, customer
presentation etc
• How to use for assessment????
MyFeedback
• Combined aspects of clickers, voicethread and Peerwise. All on a mobile platform.
• Mobile Web 2.0 System for assessment and feedback
• engage students in discussions that are on-topic and engaging with peers and tutors
• access formative assessment material (quizzes) on the go
• read feedback before viewing their • read feedback before viewing their marks/grades
• rate their peers' presentations
• create quizzes for their peers from their mobile phones.
Tutors able to:
• anonymously comment (formative)
• mark /grade and comment (summative) on the quiz creation activity
• poll/survey students
http://146.191.60.16:8080/77770316/myFB_page/try-it-out.html
WebPA
WebPA is an open source online peer assessment tool that enables every team member to recogniseindividual contributions to group work.
A well known criticism of assessed A well known criticism of assessed group work is that each student receives the same team mark, regardless of individual performance.
By using WebPA to peer assess group work, each student received an adjusted mark.
Marked by students, the people that know!
Assess By
Computer
• supporting long and constructed answers that include diagrams and mathematical formulae
• supports common multiple choice question
• tools for the setting, administration and most • tools for the setting, administration and most importantly marking of virtually any type of formative or summative assessment
• the machine does the time-consuming routine tasks while the human assessor makes the all important value judgments
Question and feedback setting tool
ABC is an electronic technology that “offers a set of easy to use yet
sophisticated tools that handle the whole assessment process from
exam and question setting to student feedback and results analysis.”
– Assessment21
What is Assess by Computer (ABC)?
Putting ABC to work
Aims
Embedding eAssessment in Module Delivery: As Easy as ABC
A Case Study in the Use of Assessment21’s Assess by Computer (ABC)
Dr Neil McPherson & Mr Alan Simpson
To harness potential of ABC to enhance and enrich student experience of teaching & assessment through:
• Location of student at centre of learning experience
• Increased potential for formative self assessment & evaluation
• Development of utility and efficiency in the delivery and marking of summative assessment
Harness synergies internal to ABC’s integrated assessment system byusing in formative and summative assessment
Multi-site delivery – includes powerful online invigilation
Accuracy and efficiency of marking – MCQs to extended Qs
Outcome – high-stakes summative exam
Marking tool
Figure #1
Putting ABC to work
Used as a just-in-time formative teaching tool in seminar setting – informal assessment used to gauge student understanding at start of seminars, allowing focus to be placed on areas of uncertainty
Made available online so that students could engage with formative assessments outside seminar contact time. This allowed students to continuously self assess and evaluate their knowledge & understanding
Used to deliver and electronically mark end of trimester high-stakes exam
Dr Neil McPherson
School of Social Sciences
@neilgmcpherson
Mr Alan Simpson
School of Science
References
Production of an enhanced and enriched feedback matrix through student use in seminar setting and outside of institution – feedback capabilities mappable across the principles of good feedback produced by Nicol & McFarlane-Dick (2006)
• Clarifies good performance through cycle of learning, assessment and re-assessment
• Facilitates self-assessment and self-evaluation producing reflection
• Encourages students to self-correct any confusion, misconception or misunderstanding
• Synchronous feedback delivery in seminar encourages dialogue with tutor and peers
• Fulfils motivational role through the mapping of progression within a safe environment
• Empowers students to continually extend knowledge and understanding of module content but also of the assessment feedback process � stimulates metacognition
• Produces rich feedback for educators – encourages reflective practice in lecturers and tutors
Assessment21. ‘E-Assessment for the 21st Century’. Website. Available at: assessment21.com
McPherson, N. & A. Simpson. 2011. ‘Embedding eAssessment in module delivery using Assessment21’s Assess By Computer: ConsiderABC to enhance the student experience of learning and assessment’. Case study. Online: JISC. Available at: goo.gl/8yycF
McPherson, N.G. & A. Simpson 2011. ‘Enhancing and enriching the feedback matrix through the embedding of a dedicated eAssessmdelivery’. Prepared for 2011 International Computer Assisted Assessment (CAA) Conference, Southampton, 5&6 July.
Nicol, D.J. & D. MacFarlane-Dick. 'Formative Assessment and Self-Regulated Learning: A Model and Seven Principles of Good FeedbaHigher Education. 2006; 31: 199-218.
Qs
“the machine does the time-consuming routine tasks whhuman assessor makes the all important value judgments”
– Assessment21
Outcome – on-going formative assessment
Student feedback
‘I liked how the ABC system gave me feedback when using practice
questions during seminar classes.’
‘Sitting at a computer to carry out an exam did not feel quite
‘It had a very "easy-to-use" interface which allowed for everyone,
computer literate or not, to complete the exam easily and efficiently.’
Mahara
• ePortfolio system
• Provides full use of multimedia
• Potential for peer review
• Can be exported to Turnitin– http://mahara.solent.ac.uk/view/view.php?id=487&sh– http://mahara.solent.ac.uk/view/view.php?id=487&sh
owmore=1
– http://eport.education.illinois.edu/view/view.php?id=192
– http://wbl-online.org.uk/view/view.php?id=263
• Social networking tool with private public and control groups
Rogo
Rogō is an enterprise-level e-assessment
system:
• support for formative quizzes, summative
exams, surveys and several other paper
types
• authentic assessments can be created
using any combination of 15 question using any combination of 15 question
types together with graphics, audio files
and video. • http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/rogo/questions/new-
index.aspx
Wikis
• Wikis provide a forum where you and your students can establish collaborative dynamics. Unlike on most blogs and discussion boards, students can interact and edit their posts and contributions within a single working document. As an assessment tool, wikis provide a space for collaboration and group work.provide a space for collaboration and group work.
• Students can work in small groups to research a specific topic, to prepare literature reviews and to discuss and prepare oral presentations as a group. In a wiki, this is easier than in a discussion board, where the multiple threads of posts and comments can become confusing. Students can edit and insert work into each other's contributions, and learn from and with each other. You can track students' unique contributions and assess them individually.
http://teaching.unsw.edu.au/assessing-wikis
7 things -
https://net.educause.edu/ir/libr
ary/pdf/ELI7004.pdf
Commoncraft -
http://www.youtube.com/watch
?v=-dnL00TdmLY
Blogs
• You can use blogs in a course to facilitate students' formative learning towards key assessable learning outcomes, including academic literacy (Dysthe, 2001) and digital literacy skills. Generally you do this by requiring students to write and literacy skills. Generally you do this by requiring students to write and publish regular posts, and by giving feedback, and/or encouraging the students' peers to give feedback, in the comments section of the posts.
http://teaching.unsw.edu.au/assessing-blogs
7 things -
https://net.educause.edu/ir/library/
pdf/ELI7006.pdf
Commoncraft -
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=
NN2I1pWXjXI
Blog Use
• Placement record
• Lab report
• Course notes
• Course reading summary• Course reading summary
• A digital diary for a group task such as a group project or an oral presentation can increase a student's perceived accountability in a group task and in turn improve the quality of their work.
Resources
• 7 Things you should know about learning technology topics http://www.educause.edu//research-and-publications/7-things-you-should-know-about/7-things-you-should-know-about-learning-technology-topics?keys=assessment&filters=
• Assessment Futures - http://www.assessmentfutures.com
• Assessment Standards Knowledge exchange (ASKe) -• Assessment Standards Knowledge exchange (ASKe) -http://www.brookes.ac.uk/aske/
• Centre for the study of higher education -http://www.cshe.unimelb.edu.au/assessinglearning/index.html
• Commoncraft - http://www.commoncraft.com/
• Effective Assessment in a Digital Age - www.jisc.ac.uk/digiassess
• HEA Assessment Centre - http://www.heacademy.ac.uk/assessment
OpenMark